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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Peter_ArnoPeter Arno - Wikipedia

    Arno drew his cartoons in batches, usually over a two-day period each week. Arno often worked with gag writers, one of whom coined the popular expression "back to the drawing board" in a famous March 1, 1941 cartoon. Lois Long aka "Lipstick" in the 1920s

  2. Their wild popularity spawned a short-lived syndicated comic strip and a fifteen-minute daily radio series.

  3. Apr 5, 2016 · In Peter Arno’s Hullabaloo, a collection of cartoons published in 1930, Arno includes a set of racy drawings featuring a dashing couple much like himself and Long. In one, a nude woman, in bed ...

  4. May 31, 2016 · Although many are definitely of their era, most have held up remarkably well in the humor department. These are my favorites from a dog-eared paperback collection called The Peter Arno Pocket Book, published in 1945, I found at a funky used book shop in Castro City, CA.

  5. In the late 1920s Arno’s cartoons for The New Yorker, dealing with the city’s aristocracy, became well known, and by 1931 he was the author of four cartoon books. In 1931 he was co-author of Here Comes the Bride, a musical satire produced in October of that year.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Several collections of his cartoons have been published: Peter Arnos Parade (1929), Peter Arno’s Hullabaloo (1930), Peter Arno’s Circus (1930), Peter Arno’s Favorites (1931), Peter Arno’s Bride for a Night (1934), For Members Only (1935), Peter Arno’s Cartoon Revue with an introduction by Somerset Maugham (1941), Peter Arno’s Man ...

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  8. Jun 23, 2016 · In the first book-length biography of Peter Arno, New Yorker cartoonist – and invaluable New Yorker cartoonists blogger – Michael Maslin delivers a meticulously researched account of the enigmatic, and often angry, Arno.

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